Rudolf Abel was the
alias of William Fischer, born July 11, 1903 Newcastle upon Tyne; died Nov. 15, 1971, Moscow.

Both of Fischer's parents
were German, his father, Genrich Matveyevich Fischer (b. in 1871 in Russia, d. in 1935, Moscow) was a revolutionary who had
been an associate of Lenin. In 1889 Genrich Fischer was arrested and sentenced for 3 years exile. In 1901 he emigrated to
Britain, where spent 20 years organizing and indoctrinating factory workers. He was a secretary of the Newcastle "communist
cell".

Genrich Fischer actively participated in smuggling arms to Russia. At the age of 16 William Fischer passed the
entry test to the London University and received British citizenship. Soon after, in 1921, Fischer's family returned to Russia.
After Lenin's death Genrich Fischer fell out of favour and lived in the Vologda region. William's mother, Lubov Vasilyevna,
was a midwife. William's older brother Genrich was born in Russia and tragically drowned after the family's return to Russia.

William
Fischer was drafted into the Red Army in 1925 where he served in the Radio Battalion. His wife, Elena Stepanovna Lebedeva,
was a cellist in the children's theatre orchestra. His daughter Evelyn was born in 1929. By recommendation of his wife's sister
he joined the security agency OGPU in 1927, and later its foreign department.

The
first of Fischer's assignments was in Norway from 1931 to 1934 with his wife and daughter, under the code name FRANK. He received
a new real English passport and was traveling under his own name. During this first foreign assignment Fischer also visited
other European countries to organise the web of clandestine radio stations and sometimes posed as an artist.

In 1935/36
he was sent to Britain. He was probably mainly used as a radioman and encoder, apparently transmitting information from the
Philby group.

Fischer's long time friend, Kirill Khenkin, concluded on the basis of his conversations with Fischer,
that whilst established in Britain he became acquainted with the world's most renowned Russian physicist Pyotr Kapitsa (1978
Nobel Prize winner). Khenkin believed that Fischer played an important role in convincing the hesitant Kapitsa to return to
the Soviet Union, where his passport was seized and he was detained (although he received exceptional treatment and a special
institute was build for him) .

Kapitsa confirmed this story in the memoirs of Andrei Saharov, even recollecting
Fischer's real name.

In 1938 Fischer was sent to Chernovtsy, near the border between Bukovina, Galicia, and Polish
territory occupied by the Germans to finalise contacts with agents recruited from German, Polish, and Ukrainian ethnic minorities.

On
December 31, 1938 he was expelled from the intelligence service and only by chance avoided further repercussions of his brother
in law being declared an enemy of the people and his boss in Britain Alexander Orlov defecting to the West. Fischer worked
as a patent technician and later as an engineer at an aerospace manufacturing plant.

He was recalled by NKVD in September
of 1941 and became a chief of the radio communication section "Otdelnaya Brigada NKVD" in the Sudoplatov's 4th "Special Tasks"
Directorate. In mid 1942 Fischer was put in charge of the "deception games" radio control. He took part in the famous radio-deception
operation "Monastery".

During the war he lived in his Moscow apartment together with his friends, the real Rudolf Abel,
and the future dissident Kirill Khenkin.

The real Rudolf Abel was Fischer's co-worker. He was born in Riga, Latvia
on September 23, 1900, not on July 2, 1902 as Fischer stated to the FBI. He went on several assignments to China and some
European countries. Rudolf Abel died in 1955, his brother was executed by the NKVD in 1938.

In 1946 Fischer was transferred
to the NKVD "Committee of Information" under the supervision of Alexander Korotkov, but he still remained at Sudoplatov's
disposal. Sudoplatov was head of the Special Service for Intelligence and Sabotage with MGB, also known as the Bureau MGB
N1 for Foreign Sabotage since 1950, from 1948. Fischer entered a special training program for his future assignment in the
US.

On October 12, 1948 Fischer left for the United States under the code name ARACH. His salary was $500 per month
($3,570 in 2000) and he got $5,000 ($35,700 in 2000) for establishing his cover. He entered the US from Canada on November
16, 1948 as Andrew Kayotis (a real American who had died in Russia).

Fischer's general assignment was the reorganisation
of the whole "illegal" (without diplomatic or other "cover") spy network in the US and setting up his own system of radio
communications with Moscow.

Fischer was also in charge of creating a sabotage network. Actually it was two separate
networks: on the West and East coasts.

The west coast network encompassed agents in California, Brazil, Mexico and
Argentina. Latin American agents were experts in sabotage operations with experience in guerilla war against Germany. One
of them, Maria de la Sierra (code name PATRIA), was Trotsky's former secretary (a.k.a. "Africa"). Michael and Anna Filonenko
were Fischer's contacts in Brazil. Michael Filonenko was an extremely successful Soviet agent in South America. He was sent
there in 1951 through China as an immigrant. With experience only in mathematics and blasting bridges and railroads he started
a successful business in Brazil and became acquainted with the members of the Brazilian government and even Paraguayan dictator
Stressner. After Abel's arrest, contacts with Filonenko were kept only via a radio station located on the special "fishing"
vessel in the Antarctic. The remains of the South American spy network, created by Filonenko, are probably active even today.

Initially
major targets for Fischer were on the West Coast near Long Beach military facilities. Agent there had connections in the Chinese
community who put explosives on board American ships carrying supplies to the Far East.

The east coast network included
in part Kurt Wissel who had sabotage experience in prewar Europe and was a senior engineer for a shipbuilder near Norfolk.
He set up a network including dockers and service personnel from German ethnic community to carry out sabotage operations.

In
the autumn of 1950 during the thick of the Korean war all explosive experts were summoned from Latin America and stayed in
the US for two months ready for possible action. Fischer established the permanent radio communications with the special combat
troops which were stationed in Latin America and were ready to come North through Mexico, disguised as seasonal workers. There
was a network of safe apartments and supporting infrastructure established especially for these purposes.

In 1948-1949
Fischer led the approaches to top level American nuclear scientists to resume cooperation "with the international anti-fascist
scientific community", which they turned down. By that time the Cold War was on and the Americans knew that Soviets already
had nuclear weapons. He personally met Theodore Hall in a New York in 1949 to assuage Hall's doubts about remaining in espionage.
Theodore Alvin Hall (code names PERSEUS, MLAD) was one of the most important sources of information from Los Alamos laboratories.
He begin to supply information for the Soviet intelligence when his was just a 19 years old because he "was worried about
the dangers of an American monopoly of atomic weapons".

In 1950 Fischer settled in a Brooklyn studio apartment with
the cover of Emil R. Goldfus - photographer and artist. He had several radio transmission sites: between New York and Norfolk,
near the Great Lakes and on the West Coast.

In addition to the "special tasks" activities Fischer assumed command
of the atomic spy network's remains. He was trying to continue recruitment of the American physicists working on atomic projects.
He supervised activities of the well known spies Lona and Morris Cohens (code names VOLONTEER & LESLY) with whom he become
close friends. The Cohens were dedicated Stalinists and recruited many informers. They worked as couriers between atomic scientists,
including Theodore Hall, and Soviet controllers. When the Rosenbergs were discovered in 1950 the Cohens fled to Paris. They
were later arrested in Britain on another assignment as Peter and Helen Kroger, sent to prison for 20 years and later exchanged.

After
the Soviets successfully tested their own nuclear bomb, Hall decided he had done enough to balance the world and withdrew
from spying. Apparently in 1952 Fischer was unsuccessful in trying to convince Hall to continue spying. Fischer was recalled
to Moscow in 1955 for several months mostly for "reliability checking".

At this time he also asked for the recall of
his assistant Hayhanen who was to later betray him. Hayhanen had been assigned to Fischer in 1954 as a substitute for another
assistant, Robert, who died on his way to the US when his ship sank in the Baltic sea. (Correct Russian name - Gyavgyanen
Andrei Stepanovich, born. 1920).

Fischer was back working in New York when Hayhanen's defection became known to Moscow.
The Centre ordered Fischer to leave immediately. He fled to Florida where he laid low for two months. Soviet spies watched
the studio and reported no presence of FBI surveillance. Fischer felt it safe to return to New York, where he was arrested
in Manhattan's Latham Hotel.

The story of Fischer's capture by FBI is described in detail on the FBI web site "Famous
Cases":

On 10th February,
1962 William Fischer was exchanged for the American spy plane pilot, Francis
Gary Powers, who had been shot down
over Russia a year or so before. The loss of his U2 plane with its surveillance and technical equipment was a serious embarrassment
to the US at the time. The exchange of spies was a face saving political act rather than an humanitarian one.

Fischer
returned to a tumultuous welcome and lived in relative luxury in Moscow until November 15, 1971 when he died from lung cancer.
His daughter reported that some of his last words were in English: "Don't forget that we are Germans anyway"...

In
1990 Fischer was honoured with his portrait on a postage stamp. Other stamps in this series were dedicated to Konon Molodyi,
captured in England in 1961, who was also a close friend of Fischer, and Kim Philby, the British double agent who fed key
secrets to the Soviet Union for 26 years, whom Fischer called traitor.